


"Drive," set in the Expanse universe of James S.A. Most of the writers are well known, and these books contain a number of shorts that exist in the same universe as other works by the same writer, e.g. The other books include "Engineering Infinity" (not relaly a strong theme, but mostly winners), "Reach for Infinity" has humanity heading out for other stars, and "Bridging Infinity" has big-scale jaw-dropping contraptions. "Edge" was a big-time award-winner, as were some of its stories. The book was very popular in Japan, and the cinematic nature of Yamamoto’s storytelling made it easy for Japanese television to adapt into an action-adventure- science fiction TV show.Best answer: Jonathan Strahan has a number of anthologies in "The Infinity Project." The first one I've read was "Edge of Infinity," a variety of stories about mankind spreading throughout the solar system, largely hard SF.

Yamamoto knows his science as well as pop culture- MM9 is both a loving parody of Japanese icons like Ultraman and Godzilla, but gives an intriguing and wild answer to the question of how such enormous creatures could exist without the laws of physics kicking it. “The B-movie monsters we know and love are basically treated like meteorological disasters along the lines of hurricanes or earthquakes by the MMD, who measures the “monster magnitude” of the various threats and uses both science and folkloric knowledge to try to save Japan from constant repeated attack. “Hiroshi Yamamoto takes on the perennial Japanese science fiction theme-the giant monsters known as kaiju,” says Nick Mamatas, Haikasoru Editor. Together, will try and save Japan, and the universe! A special anti-monster unit called the Meteorological Agency Monsterological Measures Department (MMD) has been formed to deal with natural disasters of high “monster magnitude.” The work is challenging, the public is hostile, and the monsters are hungry, but the MMD crew has science, teamwork…and a legendary secret weapon on their side. The Japan of MM9 is beset by natural disasters all the time: typhoons, earthquakes…and giant monster attacks. dedicated to Japanese science fiction and fantasy in translation. Haikasoru publishes some of the most compelling contemporary Japanese science fiction and fantasy stories for English-speaking audiences, and is the first imprint based in the U.S. An eBook edition is also available on the Amazon Kindle, Apple’s iBooks Store, the Barnes & Noble’s Nook Books Store, and the Sony Reader™ Store for $8.99. The release will carry an MSRP of $14.99 U.S. Media Release - VIZ Media’s Haikasoru imprint brings a fantastic new tale of science fiction and giant monsters to North American readers with the release of Hiroshi Yamamoto’s novel MM9, available now.
